FUN FACTS AND CATARACTS

Well hello everybody and I sure have missed writing and sharing my missives with you. The music thing is grabbing most of my personal bandwidth these days.  But have I got a story to tell:   Yesterday I couldn’t see much of anything with my left eye… and today, I can… but… oh those but’s…     I’ve been “legally blind” in my left eye since the Russians launched Sputnik.  I could see vague shapes, shadows, colors and that’s all. … Read More

HELLO 2024 AND HELLO YOU!

The last blog I wrote was about Will Smith taking a swing at Chris Rock at the Academy Awards. What year was that? Feels like ancient history, considering all that is happening in the world. In our heads. And hearts. Well I’ve missed writing and connecting with you. The “music thing” has kind of taken over my life and this worker-bee loves to work. I still do one gig a week, teaching beginning ukulele at a local retirement community. Our … Read More

A SMACK GOES VIRAL AND THE STORIES WE TELL

I’m watching the Academy Awards, answering emails and cleaning my desk. That’s when I see Jada Pinkett Smith, sitting in the swanky front row with her husband Will Smith. The next presenter, Chris Rock, lays into her with a lame joke about her hair. She’s rolling her eyes and looking very pissed-off. Hubby is laughing, kind of fakey-like. Until he isn’t. That’s when he bounds on stage, all huffy-puffy, and smacks Chris Rock in the noggin. My computer screen goes … Read More

ONE YEAR LATER

One year ago, Friday, March 12, 2021, I had big plans for the day — two Zoom gigs and a Covid surge take-out dinner with my sweetie, wrapped and ready to go from our favorite Mexican Restaurant, Paco’s Taco’s.

But…

“Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans,” wrote John Lennon. Instead of enchiladas, I stared down a baby bowl of tepid vegetable soup that a guy from dietary delivered to my hospital room.

KEEPING YOU IN THE LOOP

Big fun happenings are happening in my world and I want to keep YOU in the loop! This Thursday, September 16, 2021, from 5:00 to 6:00pm (PST), I am the guest teacher at The Ukulele Kids Club Academy. It’s FREE and online! So all you have to do is sit your butt down and play along. I remember the first class I taught with the UKC Academy because so many of you showed up and it just felt like home.

THIS MORNING SOMETHING WONDERFUL HAPPENED TO ME

My relationship with time has always been a little wobbly but since the pandemic, wobbles have turned into free-falls and bumpy rides through the land of “what is time anyway?”

This is my way of saying I don’t remember when “that morning” happened. Was it spring, summer, fall, winter? I don’t know. But it’s easy to flash back to the moment.

NEXT TIME

Apparently some astrologers report that right now is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius. To be sure, I suspect a few are also saying “nuh-uh.” As for me I tell myself, “that’s entertainment.” I bring this up because when I hear the reporter talking about this new age stuff on my local NPR station I don’t glom onto spinning moons and planets. No-no. I start humming the iconic Aquarius song from Hair, the hippie musical that opened on Broadway in 1968. “The CC Strummers can do this on the ukulele,” I proclaim out loud as I’m foraging through the fridge for a snack.
But then I fall backwards in time and land at THAT matinee at the Aquarius Theater on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. It was an afternoon that shook my world.

THE YELLOW LIGHT

Maybe life is like a traffic signal. When the light is red you stop. When it’s green you go, when it’s yellow, that means caution. You have choices and choices have consequences. Ten days ago I landed at the yellow. Let my story be a cautionary tale. Over this last pandemic year I have spent more time sitting on my butt in front of the computer than ever before. For days I wouldn’t even go outside and outside around here … Read More

366 DAYS

What a year! These 366 days. They came at us like roiling storm clouds. One freaking squall after another. At times I have felt like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, running for the backyard hole-in-the-ground before the tornado hits. My own storm shelter is made of blankets, which I pull over my head. I close my eyes, cover my ears and go “na-na-na-na-na.” Apparently kindergarten is still in session our house. Obviously, in ways stark to slim, this year … Read More

BRAND NEW DAY

“Remember, we all stumble, every one of us. That’s why it’s a comfort to go hand in hand.” Emily Kimbrough, author and broadcaster (1899-1989) I am not familiar with Emily nor her work, but I sure like this quote and maybe you noticed she lived a really long life. Heads up to my introvert, extrovert and whatever-vert friends.  Even during these “don’t touch me, don’t breathe on me” times, our pals, our friends, our tribes, the online faces in little … Read More

GOODBYE PRIVACY

I’m squirming slightly in the wobbly patient chair as my doctor peruses my electronic chart on her computer. There’s a lot to scroll through and, of all things, she lands on this: “You are due for your tetanus shot. It’s been ten years.” My doctor is brilliant, beautiful and I know immediately when she is approaching my room because of the familiar clickity-clickity of her high heels. She is also Russian and maybe it’s just me, but when she delivers a … Read More

GALLOWS HUMOR

Have you seen the toilet paper jokes on Facebook? How about the ones with hoarders and emotional support dogs? What feels like a hundred lifetimes ago I worked the 11pm to 7am graveyard shift at a local emergency room as the “admitting clerk.” Like it or not, I was a triage person, generally the first to access the “red flag” level of the sick or injured as they trundled into the waiting room. Considering my only qualification for this job … Read More

A DRINK OF WATER

The World Health Organization has just declared that we are in the midst of a worldwide pandemic. That’s way too big a concept for me to wrap my brain around and I can feel the tentacles of denial slip-sliding across the wavy stuff in my mind. Then today, it got real. My ukulele group, The CC Strummers, is one of many classes offered by The Culver City Senior Center. This morning word came down from on high that this bustling … Read More

HAPPY BIRTHDAY OSCAR

I arrive at my gigs with a list of this month’s famous birthday people and events. I will wrap each one around a song. It’s March and one of the notables is Oscar Ferdinand Mayer. He was born March 29, 1859. The guy liked meat. I bet he ate a lot of it. And he lived to be 95 years old. Hooray for hot dogs! We are sitting in a circle at my music therapy session, the memory care folks … Read More

ALEXA!

Last December a dear friend gifted me with a life changing present, although I couldn’t have known how life changing at the time. I tore open the bag with glee, careful not to spill onto my plate of spicy noodles at a Thai joint in Hollywood. “Oh my God! It’s Alexa.” Yes, THAT Alexa. The lady voice that answers all your questions (well not quite) and plays all the music you love (yeah…right). Up to now I have resisted bringing … Read More

PSYCHOANALYTIC FAMILY THERAPY

It’s Sunday afternoon. Open House day in Culver City, California. Normally I drive right past those For Sale signs sprouting on street corners. I’m too busy coming or going or thinking about food or traffic or listening to the latest podcast of Wait, Wait Don’t Tell Me. But not today… Many of my long time blog friends endured the “big house sale” back in 2016. It happened about this time—just as summer slides into fall. My mother passed away on … Read More

GRATEFUL

I land on the steps of The Superior Court Building one June morning in buoyant, conflicted downtown Los Angeles and queue up with the rest of the prospective jurors to squeeze through security and “go right” into the big gray-feeling jury pool room. Can you tell I’m jittery? Actually I am freaking out. Like I’m the one on trial. I’ve been fretting about this one day for months. Months! Will they know–these judges and lawyers and official-looking people in uniforms–that … Read More

NEVER TOO OLD

I’m at Trader Joe’s doing my “food gathering” thing and rolling the cart past the display of ready-made yummies because…well…I am good at reheating and turning on the microwave. Another shopper, a Gen Xer kind of gal, is leaning into the stacks of meatloaf and chicken wraps when her cell phone goes off. Let’s put it this way, the volume is at eleven, and it’s playing The Age of Aquarius. Suddenly this particular quadrant of TJ’s is awash in the cast … Read More

SHOWING UP

We are having a date! Husband and I are zigzagging through rain-splashy traffic for an afternoon matinee of Julia Sweeney’s one-woman show at the Geffen Playhouse in Westwood Village. It’s dog-eat-dog as he squeezes our little Honda Fit into the long line of cars entering the $4 validated parking lot next to Trader Joe’s. It may be “mellow Sunday” but it’s still a zoo out there and we will do just about anything for cheap parking in Los Angeles. You … Read More

QUOTABLE QUOTES

So I’m trying to clean my desk today… Those of you who have actually seen my desk and the piles of paper growing to the left, to the right, on the floor, know this endeavor is more like dream-on sucker. But I seriously want to make space, make calm. Okay, I want to know where stuff is. There are people in this world who can grab and jettison without pause or reflection. I am not one of those people. I … Read More

NAKED?

I’ve been spinning a lot of plates in the air lately. Gigging, teaching, doing what we all do to stay connected with each other, sleeping (sometimes), celebrating a wedding anniversary and my husband’s birthday. Oh yes, I’ve been writing songs, practicing the uke and got to participate in not one, but two ukulele festivals the last three weeks. I will share more about that in another blog but I just have to tell what happened at The Antelope Valley Ukulele … Read More

MORE KAUA’I — PRETTY MUSIC & HANGING WITH THE LOCALS

Our two weeks in Kauai have come and gone, like everything else in life, but the memories are still burning bright. And…I have pictures and a video to show for it! Have ukulele, will travel! I bring along my beloved beat-up mid-century modern Flea, the one I take to UCLA Mattel Children’s Hospital to play for the kids. The one I take to the beach. A good friend has shared a gorgeous instrumental with me, Ashokan Farewell, and I get … Read More

ZIP-LINE “OOPSIE” IN KAUA’I

One of my dear friends implores me to go zip-lining in Koloa. “My husband went upside down,” she tells me gleefully. For most people that would NOT be a tempting invitation… But I am intrigued. Craig and I have zip-lined once before on the North Shore of Kaua’i and it was spectacular. I want to do it again. This time on the south side. Now you gotta know there’s no way I’m going upside-down. “Okay got that Cali?” I tell … Read More

ISLAND COWGIRLS

I am here on the Garden Island of Kauai…to decompress.  To put a little distance between me and doing, doing, doing.  To sh-sh-sh the crazed hamster turning wheelies in my head. To tear myself from my cell phone long enough to breathe and not get sucked into another wormhole.  I’m here to feel my heart beat.  Again.  To look up at a watercolor sky.  To walk barefoot.  Somewhere. Anywhere.     My husband Craig and I are up for a little adventure too.  … Read More

ACCIDENTS HAPPEN AND A LITTLE MAGIC TOO

First I hear it. Then I see it. Then my life passes before my eyes. In slow motion. It falls with a thud and bounces on the hard floor. I hear wood kaploof and strings buzz like confused bees. It lands face down, my precious Koa ukulele. This is NOT where you want to see your prized instrument come to rest. A few of The CC Strummers gather around to offer solace after our Thursday class. The spruce top is cracked. … Read More

USE THE BATHROOM, WHY DON’T YA…

It’s 5:30 P.M., dinnertime on this balmy Monday evening. My husband and I are high on salads these days as I have discovered a cornucopia of succulent green stuff at the local farmers market. All I have to do is empty part of my weekly harvest into the salad spinner and spin. But I like to add a little extra pizzazz so I trot outside to our balcony and “my edible garden” which consists of a lone basil plant I … Read More

STILL HERE

So who made up the rule that there are ONLY twenty-four hours in a day?  Because that isn’t enough time especially if you want to…like…sleep. Too. I’ve been a busy missy and haven’t had a chance to write a blog for a while. But I think about you, my online family of fellow human beings, and hope you are doing okay. That you are slurping chicken soup as needed, smiling at a stranger at the grocery store, needed, and hopefully … Read More

BYE BYE FLOATERS

It’s two days before New Years. Late 2015. I am doing a morning Target run, trying to beat the crazy holiday crowds when all of a sudden a shrunken Medusa head drops from the ceiling. Just to my right. Hundreds of itty-bitty black dots are swimming in circles around her wiggly tendrils. Each minute new ones crash the party. Here I am, frozen in the middle of the aisle, staring at the ceiling and thinking this is some weird-ass Target … Read More

JEOPARDY

Hi Everybody! I’m so glad people read my blogs. On the one hand, it’s cotton-candy sweet just knowing the stuff I write about is stuff that happens to you or someone you know. I love that “big human family” thing where our differences begin to pale in comparison with all that we share. On the other hand, oh what a resource you are in my life. Case in point? Jeopardy. Watching Jeopardy is like comfort food for my husband and … Read More

UKULELE IS GOOD MEDICINE

What is it about the ukulele? This sweet little musical instrument that makes you feel so good. When you hear it. When you play it. We “oo” and “ah” when we watch a great guitar player or violin virtuoso, piano, sax… “Wow, look at that.” We are grateful spectators. There are ukulele virtuosos too but that is not what this story is about because the ukulele, more than any instrument I can think of, finds YOU. With its four tinkly … Read More

Breathing-In Aloha

We don’t watch television for twelve days. In a row. 288 hours. Can you freaking believe it? Husband and I get out of town. Hawaiian Airlines deposits us on the Garden Island of Kaua’i. We drive to the North Shore, Hanalei, where we hunker down in the little studio apartment over our friend’s garage. After a very challenging year, this vacation is about doing a whole lot of nothing in one of the most beautiful places on this beautiful planet. … Read More

WATCHING PAINT DRY

It’s a warm, postcard-pretty afternoon here in Culver City and I am guarding my parent’s home. I’m sitting on the edge of a rented white couch, hunched over my computer. The sofa, with its array of white and blue throw pillows, looks better than it feels. A big black table has become my temporary workspace. I share it with an assortment of “coffee table books” arranged just so. Just SO the colors pop. Ersatz curtains frame the big picture windows … Read More

LETTING GO

Hoarding is a big problem. It doesn’t matter who you are, where you are from, how much money you have in the bank, or not.  Maybe saving stuff is like saving little slivers of ourselves. We know how this story of life is going to end. That we are marching, crawling, dancing, back-flipping toward the inevitable. Does squirreling the stuff away lull us into denial? Mute the truth? Massage our egos just enough to make it through one more day … Read More

BE KIND AND THROW AWAY YOUR TRASH

The folks in my ukulele group, The CC Strummers, are wise souls who have lived long. They run marathons and use Uber. They play their ukuleles even with arthritis and broken bones. We have folks who volunteer at food banks, fix toilets and do dry wall, take care of grandchildren, spouses and bake dreamy sweet potato pies. Some are poets and artists who work with oil, watercolors, leather, wood.  Our retired teachers are paying it forward. Our architect is still … Read More

SINGING IN THE RAIN

Those of us who live in sunny, drought-stricken California were supposed to get slammed with rain. LAST YEAR. But it didn’t happen. Little did we know Mama Nature was saving up. For the big wet party in 2017 that, unfortunately, drooled all over us—The CC Strummers and me—as we performed at Culver City’s Screenland 5K Race of The Century. My adopted hometown is celebrating 100 years of “being here” on this small parcel of land. Five square miles squeezed into the map … Read More

A LITTLE HEALING

I was a sick kid–-as familiar with my hospital room in the pediatrics wing at U.C.L.A. as I was with my own little room at home. Being a teaching hospital, I was frequently Exhibit A as interns and residents and their stern physician instructors made their daily rounds. They’d refer to me by my gender and age and disease. I didn’t appear to have a name. They didn’t know I love to play the piano or sit under big shady trees or … Read More

2017! REALLY?

“I have always felt that laughter in the face of reality is probably the finest sound there is and will last until the day when the game is called on account of darkness. In this world, a good time to laugh is any time you can.” — Linda Ellerbee So laugh lots. And then laugh some more in this new year! ________________________ Craig and I sneaked to Palm Springs last weekend to recharge our batteries and visit our ukulele friends … Read More

ANOTHER GOODBYE

  His name was Bill and he was one of my teachers. My mentors. I had three of them. They arrived in my life, one by one. Just in time. Just when I needed them most. Adults, they were. Flawed of course. But each one invited me into their world with an open heart. And now they are all gone. I think they were happy to have me around too. Because I practiced. Bill was my guitar teacher. He gave … Read More

NOT YOUR NORMAL TRIP TO TRADER JOE’S

Let me tell you a story. About my mother. This happens not so long ago when she is in her eighties. Still living alone. When every little thing sets her off. Like gravity, houseplants, soap, me. Her pantry is near empty so off we go to Trader Joe’s. I hope the lunch rush is over and we can get in and out quickly. Yes she needs food. And I need St. John’s Wort because I can tell she is itching … Read More

Woodshedding, Exotic Dancers & Ukuleles

I took a well-needed break from the wall-to-wall drama swirling in my life these days with a road trip to the high desert of Southern California and the Antelope Valley Ukulele Festival. This is such a sweet gathering of folks who love the ukulele and it’s a blast teaching the workshop for beginners. Then I get to hang out in “the green room” with its wall-to-wall mirrors, munchies, bathroom and jovial conviviality up the kazoo. Fred Thompson and I commiserate … Read More

UNDER THE RADAR

I’ve been swooping under the radar since my mother passed away July 4th but I wanted to check in with you. First of all, thank you for sharing your kind words and stories about my last blog — Going Out With A Bang. I try to respond to every one of your emails but suddenly the tasks before me are looming large and I can feel the giant vacuum cleaner of time doing what it does best. Suck. Please know that I … Read More

GOING OUT WITH A BANG

It was snapping, crackling and popping around here July 4th. Despite the pleas of law enforcement, “so-called” adults (okay…idiots) were setting off fireworks, the illegal kind, in backyards and on street corners. Not to mention the big official fireworks shows nearby in Culver City and Marina del Rey. A cacophony of sounds set the air on fire. I heard blasts like gunshots, whoops, hollers and dogs. Howling, howling. I felt like howling too. “Make it stop…make it stop.” On July 4th I want to hide … Read More

POLICE PURSUIT

My mother and I are craning our necks towards the big flat screen on the wall of her board and care home. We are watching a police pursuit weaving through the streets and freeways of Los Angeles. I know what is happening. She does not. These chases occur with stunning regularity. You wonder why the soon-to-be felons don’t think things through more carefully. The helicopters are hovering overhead; the police vans with their red lights flashing are looming large in … Read More

MIRRORS

I call it “shopping therapy.” I jump on the “consumer bandwagon” and follow the sales to my local brick and mortar store. It’s like a mini-vacation that I book on my way to a gig. I don’t have to buy anything and usually don’t. But there is something about shopping that gets me out of my head and into a kind of hypnotic trance. Well that’s the way it’s supposed to work…   So here I am pushing open the … Read More

TOUCH THE SKY

Maybe you saw the movie Whiplash? About a mercurial music teacher who thrashes his young protégé into a drum-thumping master? I left the theater feeling like I’d been pummeled too. Chocolate please…   I’m not sure what you would call this bombastic style of “getting your point across” but I prefer teaching with, shall we say, kindness. Love, even. Not gushy, but honest. The great Zen master, Suzuki Roshi, told his students “all of you are perfect just as you … Read More

CHANNELING ELVIS–IN THE DESERT

My friend Wendy leads The Palm Desert Strummers who make beautiful ukulele music near the mid-century modern capital of the world: Palm Springs. Folks drive north, south, east, west from their desert abodes to play with this group. Snowbirds fly in for the winter, escaping the ice and cold of their homelands. Last week they did one of the coolest gigs ever. And it has everything to do with Elvis. Yes, THAT Elvis. The guy who would have turned eighty-one years old … Read More

FLOATERS

I can’t see the big “E” on the eye chart that hangs in the eye doctor’s office. With my left eye, that is. Actually I can’t even see the chart. I was a little girl when they first discovered my goofy left eye. Was it because I walked into walls now and then? Like most folks who have only one workable eye, I have adapted. I drive my car with ALL mirrors on high alert. I wear a headset microphone … Read More

THIS IS MY SEAT

When I saw Frank Sinatra perform at The Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, the whole aroma of the evening burrowed into my memory. The theater is gone now and so is Frank. But after all these years I can still smell the evening. I was one of thousands ensconsed in the darkness of this gigantic space, my eyes focused on the lone spotlight that Sinatra inhabited like he owned the sun, and when he turned his head in my direction and sang … Read More

FINDING A WAY

“Come here. Come here quick! YOU HAVE TO SEE THIS.” My husband is shouting from the other room. At the moment I’m peeing. I AM p-e-e-e-e-e-ing. So thank you very much. And as far as I’m concerned, whatever it is, can wait… So I’m not the picture of open-heartedness when I finally appear and turn my gaze toward the television set where my husband is pointing. “The banjo player,” he exclaims, “look at his left hand.” First of all, I see a … Read More

NAME THAT THING AND OTHER WONDERS OF ENGINEERING

“…a new kind of engineer…who can think broadly across disciplines and consider the human dimensions that are at the heart of every design challenge.” Holistic Engineering Education: Beyond Technology, pg. 234 CAN YOU NAME THAT THING?   1. A hair brush I bought at The 99 Cent Store 2. New fangled divining rod that finds water in Southern California or buried coins on the beach 3. Clandestine CIA reconnaissance device with built-in traffic Sigalert Function 4. 3-D weather barometer. “Pull … Read More

THE LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL UKULELE FESTIVAL

I wish you all lived in Southern California. At least for one weekend. Next weekend. Because that’s when Torrance, a neat little town in the South Bay part of Los Angeles, becomes “ukulele central.” I like Torrance because I like to shop. Well I call it “shopping therapy” and Torrance is bubbling over with glorious opportunities for that kind of feel-good escape. Don’t even have to buy anything. I just run my hand over the hangers and neat stacks at … Read More

BIONIC WRIST

I am still responding to all the heartfelt emails I have received after my last blog, Watch Your Step—the one about my sweetie Craig taking a nose-dive in front of our local post office and our visit to the emergency room at U.C.L.A. Yes I have left you hanging. That is because life as a caregiver (albeit a temporary one), musician, teacher and grocery store shopper sucks up time like my handy Swiffer sucks up dust and yuk. In the E.R., … Read More

WATCH YOUR STEP

We call it a “working vacation” which I think, in retrospect, are two words that don’t belong in the same sentence. Hubby Craig and I embark on a whirly-windy ukulele tour that takes us from Modesto and Sacramento to San Jose where I re-discover, not for the first time, that I don’t really, REALLY, relax until the “gigs” are done. This leaves us a day and a half of “ahhhhh,” hunkered down in an oak-filled canyon somewhere near California’s only … Read More

GOT GAS?

Oh dear. I know my semi-regular blogs have been, well, not… What can I say? It’s busy-busy here in Culver City. But then something happens that I  just have to write about. I go to Costco for gas. And my whole psychological spooky house loses a couple walls… It’s early, before the big store rolls up the corrugated steel doors and a knot of eager shoppers push in with their giant carts. It’s when the gasoline station is usually, shall we … Read More

OO-KOO-LAY-LAY

Way back when, I remember mastering three chords on the ukulele–in the blessed key of C–so I could sing and play a few songs for the injured veterans at my local VA Hospital. I am in nursing school and my fellow students and I are doing our first semester clinical rotation, learning all we can about giving sponge baths to naked men… During our lunch break I grab my little soprano what-ever-it-is ukulele and serenade a ward of guys, imprisoned in their … Read More

SANTA MONICA

My first apartment! It’s tiny—one room—eight blocks from the beach in Santa Monica. My own four walls. Literally. I climb the freshly painted white steps to the door that opens because I have the key. Oh-Oh! There is space enough for my piano, a sofa-bed, a desk, dresser and not much else. But it’s mine. Well for a price. I think the rent was $185 a month which in today’s market wouldn’t get you a floor. Or a roof. I am SO happy. … Read More

LIFE IS A MARATHON

All the “kids” in my ukulele group, The CC Strummers, are living courageous and Technicolor lives, whether they (or we) know it. The truth is I could write a blog about every one of them. I could write a blog about YOU and I bet I’d be plenty inspired. Well let me introduce you to Miss Isabelle. She walks into our ukulele class and brings a swath of sunshine with her. This woman. Like two allowance-challenged teenagers, she and I … Read More

WHEN I’M SIXTY-FOUR

I saw an article about a guy who entertains at retirement homes. Of course it catches my eye because I too rove from senior community to senior clubs shaking things up with familiar songs and sing-a-longs. So this guy tells his airport story. The one where he sees Sir Paul McCartney in the crowd of travelers. THE Paul McCartney. This is a moment, the close-encounter-kind of moment you throw yourself at…or else you regret that you didn’t. For the rest your life. … Read More

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, WE HAVE A SPECIAL GUEST…

Smack dab in the middle of frenetic December when I’m busy gigging and teaching and stressing out, as usual, I buy myself a front row mezzanine seat to see the Hershey Felder one-man show about Irving Berlin. Over the years I’ve done my homework on Mr. Berlin since I often share anecdotes about the iconic songwriters and singers with my audience. I love to pull the curtains back and catch a glimpse of the real person behind the sparkly career. And … Read More

THE REST OF THE STORY

Are you wondering “how’d the big Ukulele Holiday Show go and ho ho ho…yo?”           The audience plants their bottoms in chairs before The CC Strummers have a chance to find a landing strip of their own to set up ukulele and stand. It’s an average day of controlled chaos at your average senior center during the holiday season when folks are a little testy and oh-so-eager to find an oasis of feel good. Maybe at the same … Read More

BOOTS AND OTHER HOLIDAY TREATS

‘Tis the season’ for fruit cake, warm hugs, hurry-up-and-get-it-over-with hugs, gifting and re-gifting, making resolutions that won’t last ten minutes past New Years Day, cursing traffic crazies and hanging out with people we don’t usually hang out with. So let’s get real. These holidays can be really stressful. For a lot of people. For a lot of reasons. Can we admit that? Please… Well The CC Strummers and I are going to make it all better. Next week at our … Read More

HERE’S A LITTLE FLUFF

There’s a lot of nasty stuff happening in the world these days. Or maybe in your neighborhood or with your family or to you.  Each day, a mixed bag — some weighty stuff and some fluff. Here’s some fluff. It’s about hair. My hair. Which grows like bamboo and sometimes looks like bamboo. First of all, I have embraced my big hair even when it begins to resemble Medusa’s coiffure as it measures wind speed and direction. I clamp it in … Read More

WAIT FOR IT — AND HAPPY “T-DAY” TOO

Here is my favorite Thanksgiving Day Joke: How do you tell a male turkey from a female turkey? Wait for it… Wait for it… The male turkey is holding the “remote control.” Ha! Ha! Ha! So we have arrived at the official day of “thanksgiving.” I’m so grateful to have opposable thumbs. On BOTH hands. To work the remote control (when I can wrestle it from my husband). To play the ukulele and type these words on the computer. To … Read More

PALM STRINGS UKULELE FESTIVAL — Come For The Music. Stay For The Weather.

A road warrior I am not! Once upon a time I had fantasies that I was, or could be, but they are annihilated when I actually do my first road gig. My agent tells the folks at the “XYZ Motel” in Riverside, California, which is about 70 miles east of Los Angeles, that I am a really good piano player and singer and “just perfect for your room.” The truth is I have never met the XYZ people, they’ve never … Read More

FUNNY THING ABOUT BIRTHDAYS…

It’s a funny thing about birthdays… Maybe we toot our horn and tear into a gift or two, as if it’s all about us. But I think it’s my mother who should be celebrating my birthday. After all she’s the one who went into labor and was summarily drugged out of her mind. She’s the one who slept through the whole “birth thing” but did wake up in time to find a newborn lying on her belly looking for food. … Read More

OPEN YOUR MOUTH

Let me tell you about my singing teacher–Laura–my mentor and substitute mama-figure. She was a mélange of contradictions, this fierce Grand Dame. She was brutally honest and honestly kind. Occasionally at the same time. I both adored and feared her, but above all, I listened and watched. Laura is gone now, but all these years later I still hear her voice and sense her presence no matter what I am doing. The seeds she sowed in the precarious ground of … Read More

WHERE EVERYBODY KNOWS YOUR NAME

Maybe the television show “Cheers” was so popular, for so long, because folks like you and me just feel better, happier, safe…even, when there is a place to go where someone actually knows who you are. And seems to care a little bit.  And you care about them. Where someone remembers how you take your coffee in the morning. What’s happening with your kid. Your new job. What the doctor said? That you like chicken soup with rice.  Hold the … Read More

SHARK WEEK

It’s Shark Week on the Discovery Channel, but these days it feels like every week is a sort of “shark week” somewhere, somehow. Usually this stuff goes through one ear and out the other in our house. Usually.  But last month my husband Craig and I actually did “swim with sharks” and not exactly on purpose. Here we are in beautiful Hanalei on the north shore of Kaua’i enjoying a real tropical vacation. I don’t realize how exhausted I am until … Read More

FLASH MOB? DOES THAT MEAN WE HAVE TO “FLASH”?

The idea to do a CC Strummers “Flash Mob” has been percolating for a long time here in the neighborhood. One of our ukulele scouts talks with folks at the local mall and reports back with their curt reply. “If we let you play, we’ll have to let anyone play.” Undeterred and fortified with ukulele gusto, we locate a parcel of public land in the heart of downtown Culver City. It is a triangular shape of concrete with potted plants … Read More

THE BIG MIDDLE–UKULELE TOUR IN CALIFORNIA

My adopted home state is tall and, well, stately. There is the top–where I went to college near the redwood trees of Humboldt County. There is the bottom–where my parents and I landed so many years ago, brand new immigrants from Washington D.C. And there is the middle–where I did a week-long silent meditation retreat in the Santa Cruz Mountains…and lived to tell about it. Hubby and I are going “all-middle” at the end of June for a whirlwind ukulele … Read More

“AND HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU” & YOU & YOU

I have added another song to the pantheon of birthday ditties. As if there aren’t enough, huh. But my song has a couple twists.  Astronomy and fire. Astronomy: The lyric of my song includes this line: “So your birthday has come. Another spin around the sun.” When my November birthday rolls by I remind myself that the Earth was at this same location on her 365 day orbit around the Sun as last year and the year before that. Give … Read More

PASS IT ON

Lucky me. I get to run in a lot of different circles. The desk calendar that hangs behind my computer is a patchwork of colors and circles and arrows and Post-Its. In three different sizes. Gasp… One recent Tuesday I aim my car south because my calendar says “Scholarship Reception.” This is one “circle” that is brand new for me. I land at The Japanese Garden on the campus of California State University, Long Beach. For years my father-in-law Jack … Read More

ORANGES AND UKULELES

Crazy weather we are having these days? Have you noticed? Are you digging out of snow and ice? Are the temperatures hovering south of zero? Here in California it’s been warm and dry. Scary scary dry. Listening to the news this morning on my clock radio, the in-depth NPR report compared the drought in California’s central valley, the fruit basket for all of us who like to eat, to the Dust Bowl. All of a sudden the politicians are talking about it. … Read More

A LIFE WELL LIVED

The full-page obituary in the Los Angeles Times reminded readers that up to ten days ago Pete Seeger was chopping wood outside his farmhouse in upstate New York. And then he died. At age 94. We should all be so lucky. There is a marvelous Zen saying: “Before Enlightenment chop wood carry water, after Enlightenment, chop wood carry water.” I have no idea what “enlightenment” is or “who” it may happen too, but I am suspicious of Mr. Seeger—that maybe … Read More

GAB FEST WITH FOOD

It’s not easy making a living as a musician in Los Angeles. Or probably anywhere. In order to bring home the booty we need a reasonable command of our instrument, whatever that instrument is. But there is so much more. We need bulldog tenacity. Abundant energy helps. And what about all those juicy distractions that seduce us at every turn? Gotta say “no” to them. Over and over again. Because they arrive like a flock of birds. But if we are lucky … Read More

SHOUT OUTS!

We get into our routines, don’t we? Hubby likes to wake up super early, check his Facebook page and head to the local hole watering here in Culver City for coffee. Sometimes even before the sun comes up. The Roll ‘n Rye is his home away from home and the waitresses take good care of him. Sometimes he’ll report back later with a sterling tidbit about the morning. Like this… The deli is post-holiday crowded as a little girl emerges from … Read More

“HAPPY HAPPY” TO ALL OF YOU!

A few lines from a recent article in the Los Angeles Times caught my eye. Actually it was an obituary, a beautifully written one, for the great actor Peter O’Toole. A man, whom by all appearances, lived very wide. As well as long. “Once a thing is solidified it stops being a living thing. That’s why I love the theater. It’s the Art of the Moment. I’m in love with ephemera and I hate permanence,” he said. While most of us check our … Read More

HAPPY “TWILIGHT ZONE” THANKSGIVING

The Butterballs are on sale along with spiral cut hams, golden yams, Brussels sprouts and pumpkin pies. Harbingers of the “thank you” holiday ahead. But I know it’s Thanksgiving, for sure, for sure, when I see the commercials for The Twilight Zone Marathon on KTLA. Ah, turkey and terror. A long time ago, when my parents and I landed in another galaxy far far away—also known as Los Angeles—my father snagged a downstairs “two bedrooms and a den” in an … Read More

A SWEET SUNDAY IN HUNTINGTON BEACH

Do you hear this sometimes? Or even say it yourself? “There aren’t enough hours in the day, by golly.” Or “So much to do and so little time.” Well today is your lucky day! That is if you live in one of the states that slides the clock back one hour to standard time. Around here, in our cozy condo treehouse, I’m using that extra sixty minutes to clear my desk. I mean REALY clear my desk. And then hubby, Craig Brandau, and … Read More

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — TO ALL OF US!

I want to share a great big THANK YOU to my ukulele group, The CC Strummers, with them and with all of you on my elist. Considering the vagaries of life, everyday is a birthday as far as I’m concerned. For me and for you. But isn’t it extra wonderful to share your “birthday” with the people who mean so much to you? So Thursday is Halloween and I’m all decked out in my hippy threads because I have to … Read More

FLY FLY! STAY STAY!

During one of our many ”let’s-explore-LA” driving trips, my parents and I inched past the backlot of MGM Studios. From the street it looked like a western scene with California chaparral hugging the ground and groves of eucalyptus and oak trees set against the mid-size urban mountains. In the midst of all this “nature” and mélange of desert colors I saw a tall, long painted backdrop of a bright blue sky. “Maybe they are filming a western today,” my father opined. It … Read More

ATTENTION LATE BLOOMERS

When you love to do something, keep on doing it. If you can. No matter what they say. Or don’t say. I can’t tell you how many body blows I’ve taken over the years just doing what I do. Making music. Or how many times I’ve heard my mother’s I-told-you-so-voice in my head scolding me “you should have stayed in nursing school” when I got fired from a gig or didn’t get the audition, or whatever. Somehow I kept going anyway and in the … Read More

HORN TOOTING AND ALL THAT STUFF

Don’t we love our “projects”? I have dozens of “dem things to do” in every corner of our condo tree house. My desk looks like an organized zone of chaos. On the piano, there are piles of songs to learn or write or arrange. The ukuleles sit sentry in every room beckoning me to forget all that other stuff and “play me, play me now”! There are hundreds of emails to return, calls to make, social media to “get social … Read More

BIG FEET

Most of us have something that is, shall we say, a little off the bell curve. Some exquisite oddity that doesn’t quite jibe with the standard perceptions of conformity–whatever those perceptions happen to be today. And now, thanks to modern technology, our “interesting stuff” appears front and center on the flickering blue screens of our computer thingie-do’s. For all to see. This sort of “show and tell” engenders a myriad of reactions. Snarky stuff, for sure. But on the flip side, there is … Read More

BACON LEMONADE AND SMOKIN’ UKULELES

Welcome to the land of bacon lemonade, spam musubi and rows of Porta Potties sponsored by Sees Candy. It’s Fiesta La Ballona time in Culver City, California and Sunday morning, forty-five of The CC Strummers arrive early for our “really big show.” We bring our music stands and ukuleles, husbands, wives, friends and neighbors. We wear aloha shirts, leis and flowers tucked behind either the “I’m-Taken or I’m-Not” ear. The CC Strummers have been practicing our thirty-minute set every Monday and Thursday … Read More

IT’S FIESTA TIME and more…

So here is my challenge… How do I describe a “local” ukulele show so it feels like it’s happening in your neighborhood too? Well, this is how I see it. We all need a little bolus of joy now and then. Maybe everyday. A second-wind that lifts us over the sticky spots. Making music is a great balm for what ails us. And when we have a musical family to make music with, that’s a gift that just keeps giving. … Read More

IN A “FLASHING” KIND OF MOOD

I’ve been telling The CC Strummers, my ukulele group in Culver City, all about the big “Ukulele Flash Mob.” It’s a-comin’. And we’re a-goin’. What’s a flash mob?” One senior asks. “Well…. You wear a trench coat and when they count 1-2-3-4, you open your coat and flash your….…ukulele.” That goes over with a thud. “When is it,” they ask? One fine Saturday afternoon in Little Tokyo. So I gather three stalwart strummers, Ed, Lillian and Nancy, to carpool with … Read More

“SMILE, SMILE, SMILE” IS HERE HERE HERE

Look at dem feets! You just have to SMILE. Huh… Well that is what my new ukulele CD is all about. A breath of fresh air in our busy, cuckoo lives. Jim Beloff calls it “a perfect summer disk.” And I vote for year-around-summer! Another happy customer writes: “Here is a Monday morning story. I have my copy of Smile, Smile, Smile and put it in my C.D. player as I pull out of the driveway. Wow, such a good time is going … Read More

LET’S SALSA

I run into my good buddy and monumentally talented musician, Craig Fundyga, in the parking lot at Ralphs Grocery Store. Craig handled the percussion duties on my new ukulele CD with stunning panache. In other words, he’s totally awesome. The man plays drums, vibes, steel drums, piano and God knows what else. Is it any wonder Craig is always working and he invites hubby and me to his free concert tonight. With his Latin band, Lucky 7 Mambo. Outside. Under the dimming late … Read More

HAVE UKULELE, WILL TRAVEL

I am putting on my “you-gotta-toot-your-own-horn-because-no-one-will-do-it-for-you” hat and sharing some traveling news with you. Hubby and I are leaving earthquake country for the land of lightning bugs, killer humidity and summer thunderstorms. The little slice of earth where I grew up. Washington D.C. We will be exercising our rent-a-car on what the locals call “The Beltway.” I am hoping it is called this because it’s a cinch to drive. But I don’t think so. This is a working vacation. Let me start … Read More

HOME SWEET HOME

Not a particularly pretty sight, huh… Unless you happen to be one of the Chem-Free guys who are busily primping and preparing our plain ol’ beige building of sixty units for the big execution, as millions of termites are sent packing into their next lives. Or else the circus is in town… We’ve known this thing is coming for a while, so I tear through the drawers and shelves, pitching bottles of medicine with expiration dates that go back to … Read More

AND HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU

Every few months I entertain at the monthly birthday party for a local retirement home. A few residents can move about on their own but most are in wheelchairs and need two hearty hands to push them to the party room. Still more arrive from “memory care” and often sit there glassy-eyed and motionless. Until the music starts. Then something happens that is kind of a miracle. Bodies come alive. Just a little. For a little while. I see a … Read More

ALWAYS LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE OF LIFE

There is a flurry of music happenings around Culver City these days. My new ukulele CD “Smile, Smile, Smile” is getting mastered and will soon be sent, via internet “tubes,” to the CD plant in New Jersey to be pressed and packaged. Whoo-whoo! Hubby Craig and I are preparing for our mid-July swing through Virginia, Washington D.C. and Baltimore where we will perform and teach ukulele workshops. Details are coming soon.  Washington D.C. is my hometown and I haven’t been back in … Read More

HELLO? GOODBYE? SING ALONG!

“There’s a little goodbye in ev’ry hello.” Now that’s a sobering thought. Who wants to think about “ending” just as we are “beginning” — a friendship, a love affair, a you-name-it relationship with a who or a what? And this happens to be one of the songs on my new ukulele CD “Smile, Smile, Smile.” The idea for this tune begins the day I learn that one of my mentors has died. First there is “the phone call.” Then the rush of emotions that follows … Read More

Smile, Smile, Smile

It’s been quiet here, on the western front, with regards to my soon-to-be-born ukulele CD, “Smile, Smile, Smile,” probably because this thing has seemed, at times, like the “never-ending” story. Two years in the making. Well that’s what happens when life happens. Like…I have to work, you know. That means doing gigs and teaching. And there’s writing, cooking, cleaning, hovering around those damned social networks and never, ever catching up on my email. I don’t have to tell you how it is… We’re … Read More

TURNING 90

“Don’t get old.” I hear that. A lot. I sing at an assortment of retirement homes, assisted living dormitories, skilled nursing-almost-hospitals. A few of the residents tug at my sleeves and repeat these very words. More than you would think. My own mother says it too. When she remembers. For the last few years she has been “87 years old.” Well that’s her story and she sticking to it. Here is a woman whose gray hair leaks around the sides … Read More

A LITTLE MORE TO SAY ABOUT “LOSING A FRIEND”

Last week I shared the story of my long-time friend, Cinda, who passed away on Easter morning and I received a bounty of heartfelt responses. Thank you! The people we love and who love us, the critters, the flowers on the window sill, the fresh strawberries in a bowl, the long-lived relationships, the bucks in the bank, the insights we file away on mental post-its—they come and they go. It seems like there is a little goodbye in every hello. … Read More

LOSING A FRIEND

We were friends for a long time. Thirty years, give or take. We saw each other through her divorce and my marriage. And the whole galaxy of “life events” that happen–the surprises that come out of nowhere, the “situations” that drag on. Cinda had that “joy” thing happening and she delivered it into every corner of her life. By the time we met, she was teaching and working with children. But Cinda loved to sing too and she was a … Read More

LITTLE ONES VISIT THE CC STRUMMERS

Surprise! Surprise! That’s what happens last Thursday morning when a whole class of little ones from Farragut Elementary School in Culver City unexpectedly drop by my ukulele group, The CC Strummers, to sing a special song FOR US and leave a bundle of hand-made valentines on the table. It is Valentine’s Day after all! There are as many kids as ukulele players and they joyously squeeze into our already jam-packed room. With parents and teachers in tow. When the kids … Read More

A SECOND LOOK

Hi Everybody, We go to sleep early New Years Eve because we’re exhausted. It’s a desert-cold night and my husband and I are grateful for heat and our comfy hotel room bed. We are somewhere in Phoenix. There is a riotous party ratcheting up, downstairs. The pumping, thumping music lulls us into REM sleep. Well until the stroke of midnight, that is, when exuberant screams of revelers blast through the walls and fireworks, yes fireworks, go ka-boom. We are in … Read More

MUSIC, MAYANS AND GOOD WISHES…

Well the end of the world has come and gone. Lookie! Lookie! We are still here and celebrating the holidays. Or un-holidays for some. And getting ready for a new year, new beginnings or more of the same. Ah the great mystery. We just don’t know what’s going to happen. Speaking of unexpected twists and turns… My husband Craig, the guitar player, never dreamed he would give up the six-string for the little four-string marvel and become extraordinarily accomplished on the ukulele. Or … Read More

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

I can smell “winter” in the air, here in SoCal.  The cool breezes push through the light sweaters I wear.  Today it’s actually drizzling a little and since Mother Earth rotates on an axis, it’s getting positively night-like in the late afternoon.  A whole lot darker than last month. That means its time to haul out the extra blankets.  My husband Craig “ooo’s” and “aah’s” every year as I lay his across his side of the bed.  I crocheted it.  Just … Read More

TEACHERS “DO” AND “TEACH”

Have you heard this saying? “Those Who Can, Do. And Those Who Can’t, Teach.” Who ever coined this one needs to repeat kindergarten. A couple times… As I continue to improve my chops as a teacher, the words of my treasured guitar mentor resonate in my head. One afternoon during a lesson, this genius player told me, flat out, that he didn’t really learn about the guitar until he began teaching it. Until he had to explain what the hell … Read More

THE LAST FLIGHT

Today a travel-warrior made her final flight, past Venice Beach, Disneyland, The Queen Mary, Universal City, Malibu and even home sweet home, Culver City. This is Space Shuttle Endeavour’s last hurrah before she grabs the big room at her new retirement home. The California Science Center near downtown Los Angeles. Like thousands of others, I seek higher ground to snag a view of this miraculous machine, riding piggy-back on a great big 747.

Hello and Goodbye – Marvelous Midwest

This post is THE FINAL INSTALLMENT of the 11-part series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. All in one very eventful trip. My husband I live a 10K race away from LAX. It’s like there’s an airplane freeway in the sky that passes over our condo. This is the soundscape of life around here. In Missouri, it’s cicadas. I never actually see one, no little green guy with a “C” on … Read More

Elvis, Llamas and Ukuleles that Float

This post is part 10 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. It’s the first day at the Mighty Mo Ukulele Festival. We line up in the quaint Swiss Chalet dining hall for dinner and fill our plates at the trough…er…buffet. Lovely women, dressed Heidi-like, scurry here and there providing the sweetest service. “You mean I get dessert?” I ask. “This is the Midwest, honey. You get dessert … Read More

Ukulele Players Make Nice With Everyone

This post is part 9 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri.  It’s the first day of the Mighty Mo Ukulele Festival and we land at The Cedar Creek Conference Center which is nestled in the big green trees atop one of those rolling hills in wine country Missouri. Ukulele players from neighboring states like Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, even not-so neighboring California, pull into the driveway to unload their … Read More

An Extra Day of Adventure

This post is part 8 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri.  We turn west onto a blue highway toward New Haven.  That’s not Connecticut.  It’s Missouri.  I didn’t know this “Show Me” state has a wine country.  But it does and here we are.  The corn crop is a lost cause.  The soybeans are hanging on for dear life.  Lord knows where the grapes are but … Read More

What Time Is It?

This post is part 7 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. All in one very eventful trip… It’s a straight shot from Indianapolis to St. Louis on Interstate 70 as we continue our Midwest sojourn. After several days of getting to know the relatives I found on Google and Facebook, my husband and I are heading to The Mighty Mo Ukulele Festival in the rolling hills … Read More

Classical Music Meets Aloha

This post is part 6 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri.  It’s our last evening in Indianapolis. My husband Craig and I are heading over to the armory-size San Ash Music Store where we are scheduled to perform, teach a clinic and jam with the Indy Ukers. We settle into the “acoustic room” where the walls are festooned with ukuleles, guitars, banjos, mandolins. Standing sentry, they … Read More

“It’s De-Lovely”

This post is part 5 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. Some folks call it PEEE-ROO. Others, PEAR-ROO. I call it PURR-ROO. Like Peru, South America and olé. That would be bienvenidos to Peru, Indiana. The hometown and final resting place for one of my favorite songwriters of all time: Cole Porter.

Visiting The Other House

This post is part 4 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri.  Somewhere in a lush, woody area of Indianapolis is “the other house,” shared by Patricia, the matriarch of the Tretick clan, her daughter Blythe and grandson Lexi. Day two of our Midwest visit, the whole family converges at the compact dining room table, digging into burgers, steamy-hot off the grill, and homemade delicious bean salad, … Read More

The Mama

This post is part 3 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri.  For those of you joining this miniseries midstream, let me catch you up. My husband Craig and I flew into Indianapolis from Los Angeles. My first trip to the “middle.” We met and totally fell in love with a branch of my family that, up to very recently, I didn’t even know existed. And visa-versa. It’s an … Read More

The Family That Plays Together Stays Together

This post is part 2 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. All in one very eventful trip… My Indiana cousin Noelle and I email each other and on rare occasions, talk on the phone. She wishes I would learn to text because her hip and busy musical family have totally embraced that crazy-thumb way of staying in touch. I’ve studied her pictures and this former ballerina … Read More

Marvelous Midwest

This post is part 1 of 11 in the series, “Marvelous Midwest,” about discovering my extended family in Indiana and “ukeing” it up in Missouri. All in one very eventful trip… I grew up hearing stories about my great uncle Sidney. The musical prodigy. The violinist. The light of this Russian immigrant family that landed in Baltimore around the turn of the century. My grandmother was the eldest of five and twenty or so years later Sidney came along. The … Read More

Eeny, Meeny, Mighty Mo

Hubby and I, partners in love and ukulele, are heading east to the land where there is a three hour time difference. We’re meeting with the riotous Indy Ukers of Indianapolis, Indiana, on Wednesday evening, July 18 from 6:00 to 7:30 P.M. to play, sing, teach a little and have one glorious Kanikapila of a time. Joy central is The Sam Ash Music Store (located at 8284 Center Run Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46250). And everyone is welcome. Even if you … Read More

Life, Death and Scrambled Eggs

As if my wild ride through the car wash last weekend wasn’t enough… (see previous post) A family of crows, who I suspect helped themselves to the all-you-can-eat salad bar at The Sizzler, took a royal dump on my front windshield. This morning. My husband insists I go straightaway to our own car wash here in the neighborhood. Compared to the crazy sci-fi one in the valley, “The Bubble Machine” is normal. And soon I am on my way to … Read More

A Car Wash Thrill Ride

I arrive at my house party gig way too early. The trip from my part of Los Angeles to their part of the San Fernando Valley is not so far as the seagull flies, but seagulls don’t have to drive on the 405 Freeway which has turned into a 24/7 construction zone. One little bumper-thumper can jam up the road as if there’s molasses on the asphalt. That is why I leave extra early for my gigs these days. So … Read More

Intouchable

Hubby and I don’t get out much. We’re too busy woodshedding on our ukuleles and doing “music stuff.” So it’s a real treat to go to the movies and we have a hot date this morning at the mall cinema up the road. The one that shows foreign flicks. We’re here to see a French movie, “The Intouchables.” The word on the street is “see it or else.” We find our assigned seats. They are cushy comfy and actually rock. … Read More

Music, Saying Goodbye and Glen Campbell

My husband and I attended the big boisterous party, known as The Hollywood Bowl, to watch Glen Campbell do his farewell performance in Los Angeles. He is saying goodbye. This mega-talented musician, singer, entertainer is slowly taking leave of “this” world, of “his” world and all he holds dear. Alzheimer’s disease.

Carlsbad, the Kings and You!

Hi Everybody, Well it’s a fun time in the old town Thursday night, June 28, when my husband Craig and I are the guest artists at the Big Kanikapila! And you are invited! We will share the evening with the wild and wonderful Ukulele Society of America at the Ocean House, located at 300 Carlsbad Village Drive in Carlsbad, California, 92008. And it’s all about Kanikapila joy – food, music, hula dancing, schmoozing and lots of fun. For free! Except … Read More

Go Kings!

Hi Everybody! My idea of “sports” is figure skating. Some people would disagree. Especially hockey fans. Chill out… We’re talking about ice-friendly competitions here… That said, I am over the moon because The Los Angeles Kings finally, and I mean finally, won the coveted Stanley Cup. My husband says to me “I didn’t know you like hockey?” My friends too. “Where did this come from…?” They wonder aloud. Well actually it has everything to do with people and place and … Read More

On Websites and Plumbing Fixtures

Hi Everybody! Amy and I… Well Amy… She has been hard at work re-creating my website, my shiny new billboard in the sky. In an earlier blog I wrote about the challenges I have delegating the various tasks of my life to other people and I was holding onto my website with every grippy joint of my body because I love putting the thing together. I love tweaking it in the middle of the night and feeling that delirious feeling … Read More

“Ukeing it” out yonder!

Hi Everybody, Ukulele road warriors, the ones who zig-zag the country performing, teaching, meeting and greeting at festivals and uke groups… They will laugh me off the planet when they find out I have never been to the Midwest. Our Midwest. Okay, hubby and I have grabbed the golden lei and made it to Hawaii. And I was born in Washington D.C., so I’ve been ice-skating on the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial. I wandered around New … Read More

Spending Time with My Mentor

Hi Everybody! I think he is a mystic. My friend. And mentor. Bill. He lives this life in a different way, as if his eyes can peer through the light dust that covers everything and see right into the heart, the truth of whatever it is. In his younger days Bill loved to hike in the rugged San Gabriel Mountains that loom large, just east of Los Angeles, and one morning he brought me along. There he is, scrambling to … Read More

Reno Ukulele Festival – Backstage at the Really Big Show

Ukulele players from near and far settle into the sky-hugging Nugget Hotel for a weekend of “everything ukulele” and then some. This includes two big evening concerts in the historical Celebrity Showroom. Saturday’s opening extravaganza features “The Ukulele All-Stars.” Plans for the Saturday show are still unfolding as we arrive in Reno and learn we are invited to join the All-Stars for the last song of the set. Of course we are thrilled but I didn’t pack anything razzle-dazzle to … Read More

Reno… Pictures and Pizzazz!

Hi Everybody! When all is said and done, the moments of our lives are wrapped in “relationship” whether that momentary connection is with another person, a thing, a thought, a whatever. Something about the ukulele builds and maintains relationships, communities, even. This extraordinary “coming together” was abundantly and joyfully evident at the Reno Ukulele Festival. So please relive these memories with me as we revisit the people! Now here’s the scoop. My hubby Craig and I just recycled our old flippy-phones … Read More

Reno Ready

Hi Everybody! I’m slipping out of the groovy groove I whirl in, here in SoCal. Love Los Angeles. Hardly ever leave Los Angeles. But at the end of the month my ukulele-playing hubby and I are packing the Honda Fit and heading due north, through the Mojave Desert onto Highway 395 which hugs the east side of the majestic Sierra Nevada mountain range, up up up past Bishop and Mammoth onto Reno, Nevada. We are performing and teaching workshops at … Read More

How’d they Do That?

Let me explain. In this picture I am the “person” on the right. Pointing at the zillion-dollar Lexus sedan which is just out of camera shot, as they tell me I might win it. Yes, welcome to Fantasyland? Oh and the nice lady on the left, in gray, completely in gray, is employed by the Cirque du Soleil to entertain and charm the audience before we are ushered into the Grand Chapiteau. That’s “tent” to the rest of us. My … Read More

Twenty Five Minutes at a Time

Apparently “delegating” is not something we jump through hoops to do.  It’s hard for us to admit the obvious, that we can’t do it all.  Then again, letting go with clenched fists is not a happy picture either.

Asking for Help

For those of us who are spinning too many plates or burning too many candles at all ends or giving up altogether and devoting their lives to working Sudoku puzzles…and the hell with it… Delegate! It takes a village.  Why not call on people for help, especially when it’s a win-win for everyone.  Why didn’t I learn this lesson in kindergarten?

Learning to Delegate

“Blogland” has been a distant star for me the last couple of months.  That’s what happens when you sink into the abyss of “overwhelm.”  Like many of us, I feel like the guy who appeared on the old Ed Sullivan show keeping all those plates spinning in the air.  When one begins to wobble and head south this desperate man rushes to the rescue, only to be distracted by a new wobbler at the end of the row. I love … Read More

“Uke” Can Change the World

My ukulele group, The CC Strummers, enjoyed an extra special treat on Monday.  And I mean extra special!  “Jumpin’” Jim Beloff, one the of seminal figures in the modern-day renaissance that is “ukulele,” visited the Culver City Senior Center for a teach-a-thon, storytelling and kanikapila (which means we all get to sing and play along). Years ago, Jim and his wife Liz sensed something special about this humble little instrument, trusted their instincts and let that intuition guide them forward.  So what do … Read More